IBp jpGP°i! POWDER Absolutely Pure Celebrated for its leavening strength uml health fulness. Assures t lie food airuinst alum ami all forms of adul teration common to the cheap brands. I> VAIJ IIA KING I'OWIUIH CO., NKW YORK. FREELAND TRIBUNE. Esta'clisboi ISBS. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY IIV THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: Main STREET ABOVE CENTRE. Make till money orders, checks, etc., payable to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. STI ISC'ltll' 11 ON KATES: One Year $1..% Six Months 75 Four Months .. .50 Two Months 25 The date which the subscription is paid to is on the address label of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. For instance: Urover Cleveland 28Juncl)7 means that drover is paid up to June 26, 1807. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report promptly to this office whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. FREEHAND. DIONN"A. MAY 27, JS'JT. WASHINGTON LETTER. Washington, May 25. 1807. The house of representatives presents an object lesson to the world showing how easily a supposedly free branch of a supposed popular government can he in it/./.led. Three-fourths of the members of the house would like to vote for the Morgan resolution, adopted by the senate last week, for the recognition of the belligerency of the Cubans, but they are not allowed to do so. Mr. McKinley says the adoption of that resolution by the house would interfere with the mysterious Cuban policy that he is en gaged in hatching out, by compelling him to show his hand, as it is a joint resolution which would have to be either signed or vetoed, and not a con current resolution, like the one adopted by the last congress and pigeon-holed by Mr. Cleveland; the sugar trust says the resolution must not bo adopted, and C/.ar Reed says it shall not be, and there you are. The Democrats kick to the full extent of their power, but the Re publican members of the house swallow their convictions and vote against the will of their constituents because they are afraid to offend Mr. Mclynloy anil Mr. Reed, lest, they should fail to land an office or two or to get the committee assignments they want, and the farce of calling the house a legislative body goes on, like the butcheries in Cuba. J here will be no tax on the breakfast of the poor, nor any additional tax upon beer or tobacco, if the Demo,-rats can prevent it. as a caucus of Democratic senators unanimously decided to move that the entire internal revenue section of the amended tariff bill, now being debated in the senate, be struck out. Whether that motion is carried will de pend upon the vote of thu Populist sena tors. it was also decided at the caucus that the Democratic senators would only antagonize the tariff bill to the extent of exposing its enormous and unnecessary increase in taxation, and would inter pose no objections to taking a final vote in a reasonable time. The Republicans senators are having a regular monkey and parrot time themselves over some of the amendments to the hill, and an open light among them is expected to be an early and interesting feature of the tariff debate. They are going to pas> the bill, of course, but not until it lias been much changed. There has been numerous tilings showing the hold of the negro politicians of the South upon Ross Jlauua. as a natural result of Manna's method of se curing McKinley delegates in the South, prior to the St. Houis convention. The latest example was the withdrawal from Ihe senate of the nomination of S. S. Matthews, to bo register of the land office at Jackson, Mississippi. Matthews is a white Republican who was strongly backed by such men as Senator Foraker, Pension Commissioner Evans and Gen eral Powell Clayton, hut the negro mem ber of the Republican national commit tee from Mississippi, Jim Mali, didn't like the nomination, so lie went to Ross Manna and told him it must be with drawn, and Mr. Manna lost no time in getting Mr. McKinley to withdraw it from the senate. The interest in the successor to Sena tor Earle, of South Carolina, who died last week, is I)} no means confined to South Carolina Democrats. As the legis lature will not meet until next January, the governor will appoint a senator to serve until an election is held. South Carolfhiuus in Washington think that Kepre>cnlati\e. McLauriii's chances for becoming senator are excellent, s. Oswald's mirier meat D pure, clean and guaranteed to be the best. | swapping Fret* Hide* For Dutiable Sugar, j "The senate tariff hill ns a whole," says ex Congressman John De Witt Warner, "is a notice fo eastern maim factnrers of what they may hereafter expect. Hitherto they have considered protection as a sort of providential ar rangement by which they were enabled to feed on the rest of the country. Now, like Polonius in 'Hamlet,' they are in vited by'acertain convocation of politic worms' to a supper'not where they eat, but where they are e ten.' The manu facturers of New England, New York ' and Pennsylvania are to take their turn ;.t being mulcted for the benefit of oth ers who now control legislation. This applies especially to the hide schedule." i "Cannot the New England senators secure favorable changes in that schcd ulc?" "I think not. The bill as it stand • I.j , satisfactory to the Sugar trust and prob ably cannot he kept ko except tv lie votes controlled by the Cattle trust, of the west. Were the New England sena tors willing to risk offending the Sugar j trust* they could doubtless defeat the I j duty on hides, but the fact is that E .*- ton and .Providence, in proportion to their size, are far more thoroughly sat urated with Sugar trust influences than is any other part of the country, and, ' however much Senators Aldrich, \Y t | more, Hoar and Lodge may bewail the I fate of their boot and shoe immufac ; turers, there is no prospect whatever that they will sacrifice the Sugar trust ; interests to help them." Senator Hoar—That (free) hide liar, been in the family 25 years, and it al I most breaks my heart to part with it. j Senator Allison—-You needn't snivel, j Keep your old hide if you want to, but I> ou don't get any sugar (profits). See? "Sugar TruHt Exist* No Longer." i Wo are assured by The Sugar Trmlo I Journal of May 13—organ of the Sugar J trust—that "if ever a monopoly existed ! in the sugar refining business it exists | no longer, and it is not likely that it ! will ever he renewed," This is delight ful news, Tiie .Journal was discussing an amendment to the senate hill to have refined sugars pay the same duties as raw sugars in oases where the manufac ture is controlled by a monopoly. If this "visionary proposal" should pass the senate, it would jeopardize the tariff bill and tlio Sugar trust's tens of millions of surplus profits, which are so near at hand that the mouths of Have incyer and Searles are watering for them. Tiie Sugar trust trembles at the prospect and tries to keep up its courage by hav ing its organ inform the world that "A lot of such visionary proposals will, no doubt, be introduced while the bill is under discussion, but in the end the sound judgment men will control and a tariff bill be passed without very much ] change from the senate schedule." The trust may be right. It usually is, for it can predict what will happen to the sugar schedule of the senate bill. It knows what demands will he made by its agents and tools in the senate, and it also kuows the power of those who make demands to enforce them. It puts $70,000,000 against the interests of 70,- 000,000 people, and it knows from ex perience which has most weight in the I senate, where two or three hold the bal ance of power. No, there is 110 sugar trust and never was one. "When the devil was sick, the devil a saint would be." Perpetual Motion by Proteetiou. The California argument for higher ! fruit duties is a sort of perpetual mo tion. The only disadvantage tho Cali- I fornian fruit raiser is at is to be found iu tho cost of his land, but the only tiling that makes his land expensive is the profitableness of fruit culture. Ho the matter works out 111 this ivay: The great profits of fruit raising sent the value of laud up to hundreds of dol lars an acre. Tho interest oil tho value of tho laud makes a large item in a fruit raiser's balance sheet, and lie feels the need of a high price for his fruit. This Senator Jones procures for him by letting it be known that he will not vote for tho tariff bill unless it contains j duties 011 hides and increased duties i 11 fruit and the cheapest sorts of wool, j The increased duly adds to the profits of fruit culture, and the price of land takes another rise, whereupon the fruit grower complains that tho interest 011 iiis land investment is so great or the rental lie has to pay for his laud is -o high that there is an insufficient profit iu the business for him, and the only . thing that will save him from disaster j is more duty. j Logically this process can be carried 011 indefinitely. Practically it cannot. [ because with the increase 111 the price j of fruit the consumption of fruit will !, j decline. The consumer will be worse ! off for the change. Tho grower, so far j as he is not to he considered as a laud j owner, will bo 110 better off, but the I value of the land will bo as high as the j j profits of fruit culture will permit.— Journal of Commerce and Commercial | Bulletin. Who Pay* For Protect ton? The law is invariable) that the unpro tected must Fay the ultimate cost for the protection of the protected.—David , Lubin. | THE TORN LETTERS <1 ... By Eeßev Urms'rcng. ... Jjjj M' UNDREDS of peo ple bad come into town that August day in JBGI to see > the column or re emits in arch e d past. Many u fa ther, making pre tense of attending Ids horses, ns the sharp words of the • Irill sergeant cut t he silence of t he sum mer day, grieved for the boy who wax obstinately yet blamelessly minded just ! now to fro into great danger. And the 1 little children whose brothers were fol lowing the drummers up and down the i I ; übile square shuddered as they j thought of the battles coming, and j wished-—very ingloriou iy—that this company might be sent to some place w he. e hostile bullets c old not come. At tie end of l!.c bridge, on a little elevation that r .nmanded a distant view of the p:b . square. Judge Wade and his wife sat in t he back seat of their open carriage, und looked at the soldiers learning promptness and precision and concerted movement. On the front seat sat young Wallace Wade. "Drive on," said the judge. "We have seen enough of them." Hut young Wade gathered the reins slowly, and looked again at the uni formed men, at the handsome dress of 1 he officers, at the seductive glint of the guns. "Come, come," said the judge. "Drive on, Wallace," said Mrs. Wade. Rut yet the strapping fellow lin gered. Me was in the untried ground where two allegiances met. Presently he turned impulsively, yet resolutely, his eyes full of a light his parents rec ognized, though they never had seen. "You drive home, father," he said, ami passed the lines to the older man. "I'll be at home for supper." And he leaped lightly to the ground. For there at the corner of the public square was Elenor Thompson, and she H'r f jW.) m Mm SHE TURNI.D TO HUM IXSTAXTLY. had seen him. Me did not go straight to her, though his mother knew that would be h'.s destination. "That Thompson girl will persuade him to enlist," she. "She is half the cause of all this enthusiasm." "If she does persuade liiiu," said the judge, bitterly, "I will never forgive wither him or her." Wallace greeted a few friends as he joined the ranks-of the spectators. "Why aren't y u with t hem?" asked a young fellow t > wh in as property the que: lion m'- # t Ihm applied. "They neAl you," nddid an old man who was thankful for his age. 'A 011 know how to drill men," added a boy. "If 1 was you—" "Wallace will go when the time •omes," rejoined a pleasant old lady— who had no sons to bereave her. He hfc them banter. He had fought it all out with himself and resolved his duty was filial obedience. And lie knew his father's wishes. Rut he drifted along the line of watchers and joined Elenor Thompson -ut the corner of the field. The soldiers had completed an evolution and the people were cheer ing. She was waving her handkerchief wildly. Her eyes were flashing, her bosom was heaving. She was instinct With martial enthusiasm. Me touched her hand. "You are in earnest," said he. "It is splendid. Mow grand they look! Mow noble they must be! If I were a man—" She paused, but Wallace knew, "Let us take a walk," he said, pres ently. "No." She was filled with the spirit that inspires Spartans—as were multi tudes in that day. Iler ideal, her hero, must he a soldier. "1 am going to enlist," he said. For so are our resolves consumed. She turned to him instantly with eyes that blazed in worship and devotion. I She put out her hands. There was cn ■ ressing, there was ardor in them. I There had been an hour of resting. ; The drums were beating again. The j- fifes were piping up patriotism. The I company was counting fours and lenrn ! ing the skirmish drill. At the farther j side, of the square a dozen recruits, en ; listed since the parade began, were j laruing the foot drill, and Wallace Wade, a light rattnn cane in his*hand, was teaching them. When it was over lie looked in Elenor Thompson's eyes niul win rewarded. There was a public dinner for the i soldiers. There were speeches by poli ticians who lent their voices and be lieved it excused them from/lending their arms. There was music, and'the ' adulation of tin? throng. Then tliedls* ; solving of a host am! the threading ! of river paths by tavo and two—who ' discarded llardee in the gentler tactic* I of Dan Cupid's war. And Monday they marched gayy i away. "This is Memorial day," said young Harold Wade. "All the schools are go ing to the cemetery. 1 am to help scatter flowers. Are you and grand ma going?" "No, I don't approve of this new holi day." answered old Judge Wade. "There were enough without it. And we have no soldier buried there." "I wish my father's grave were there," exclaimed the boy. "But 1 will lay some roses on a grave that I don't I.now—one of the unmarked graves. And it will be for him. I wish my mother had lived. And I wish she were here." "Sometimes T think we ought to tell him," said Mrs. Wnde, when her grand son had hurried, heavy-hearted, away. "Not till he is a grown man," said the resolute judge. "He would blame [ II 1| II #. 1 IJ? . l FATHER. us too bitterly now. I said befon Wallace enlisted that if she got my son to go to the army she would regret it.. 1 think she lias. This Memorial day nonsense will be forgotten long before Harold grows up." It was a new ceremony, but the spirit of it appealed to the people, and they paid all honor to the armies that lie "front face to the stars." Harold Wade felt the significance as he laid roses on the graves of men who had made earth's final sacrifice. And when other ceremonials were occupying the rest he slipped from his schoolmates and laid a rose on the grave of a soldier who had fought for freedom and had neglected to accumulate even so much as would have purchased a monument. As the boy turned back to the crowd a woman approached liim swiftly—a woman of fair and happy, yet wistful, face. Her gentle hands had caressing in them, and the fragrance of her breath was like a memory from in fancy. She gave him a paper. "Rend it when you get home," she said. "When you have found the other half you will know." Then she stooped and kissed him and walked swiftly ivwny, while he stood wondering. "The other half! 1 will know—what ? Who was she?" • lie looked at. the paper. It was a torn bit of si letter, much wrinkled. It was dark stained on the uneven edge. And there was a miniature ting, like a mono gram, on the upper corner. And this is what lie found: 6. + \nj yiAtl -Vci UTn't fit AC-H | Vj *<y) •S* <*n'/£ u }- rf< l>C . In the vacation that followed present ly Harold had a great deal of time on his hands. One clay it. rained, and lie crept up to the attic with a hook of**d venture. And when he was tired of fol lowing his hero through perils lie wan icml into a shadowy nook under the roof w here the rain was heating, and dragged out. a crumpled old knapsack which he. had never seen, lie loosed its fastenings, and pulled open the .stub horn leather. In it were some articles of dress and toilet, already quaint, though tills son of a soldier was but half way through his teens. There was a Testament, and a needle, with some thread. And there was a torn half sheet of note paper, written on fairly, and dark stained along its uneven edge. It bore these words: : L yKAet/ sffUt *(uit . fc<~, j ..y—'fv "V -iCi*/ / 3tr£tfu fj fKmrtCftto #h/ , • _1 V "It's the otlnJr half I" he cried. And the son of a soldier leaped to his feet. "Now I shall know." He went straight to his grandfather, and showed liim the two matched frag ments. "You have been very good to me," lie said, "but that woman was my mother. My mother is living, and not dead. She was with my father when lie died. You got that kuapsnek somehow, but she had saved half of the letter which had been cut in tw o by the bullet that gave bini his death wound. And she has never asked you for anything, though she might have asked you for much. Now I ask for her. Where is she?" And the grandfather told. He was less bitter to the.woman w ho had sent his son to t lie war, since she had soot lied that son while he suffered. Ho that the judge's home received a sweet-faced woman who reaped in years of loving Companionship the reward of n self-de nial that had lasted from the day she left a new-made grave in the Wilder ness, and found her toddling son had been spirited away. NEWS OF THE WEEK. TlmrHday, May 20. Five cannon, captured 'by General Scott from General Santa Anna-during the Mexican war, have been stolen from West Point. Charles W. McLaughlin, a member of the Valentine-McLaughlin swindling syndicate, was convicted of grand lar ceny In New York. Oscar Wilde, who was so-fenced in London on May 25, 1895, to two years' imprisonment with hard labor was re leased from Holloway prison. Miss Fannie Richardson, a recluse and miser, died in Taunton, Mass., worth $50,000. No will has been found, and as far as is known she had no rel atives. Eight houses were burned to the ground, nine others were badly gutted, and 16 families were rendered home less by fire in Jersey City. There were many narrow escapes, but no lives were lost. The property loss was $150,000. The Pittsburg jury returned a verdict of acquittal in the case of Lieutenant Edward S. Farrow, charged with con spiring to defraud the Mutual Reserve Fund Life association of New York. The insurance company was adjudged lia ble for the costs of prosecution. Friday, May 21. United Slates Senator Joseph H. Earle died in Greenville, S. C. Secretary Sherman sent a protest from the German government against the sugar schedule of the new tariff bill to the senate. White raps near Mountain Grove, Mo., attacked and killed .Mm Mitchell and his brother-in-law, Jack Coffman, al leged to he thieves. Two mud geysers have within a week burst forth in Morn bay, opposite the town of El Moro, Cab. to the wonder of the people living In the vicinity. Democratic National Chairman Jones will, it Is said, advise that national is sues be kept out of the coming mayor alty campaign in New York city. A similar intimation to Mr, Bryan, it is said, led the former candidate to de cline to speak there on Labor day. Hoboken's great factory building on Twelfth street, between Washington and Hudson, was burned, together with a block of flats and a number of canalboats, which caught fire from (ly ing sparks. One hundred and twenty families were rendered homeless. The property loss is $050,000. Hnturtiay, May 22. By a vote of 1,713 to 022 Cambridge university in England rejected the pro posal to confer degrees on women. The steamer Florida was sunk in Lake Huron by collision with the steamer G. W. Roby in a fog, hut no lives were lost. ltichard T. Grant, at one time a writ er of verse and short stories, was found dead in Mulberry street, New York, lie had been a recluse of late. A bust of Sir Walter Scott was un veiled in Westminster abbey, and ad dresses were made by Colonel liay, the American embassador, and A. J. Bal four. Charges of brutal treatment of con victs were made before the Pennsyl vania legislative committee which is in vestigating x the management of the state prisons. The Cuban question was disc ussed at the meeting of the cabinet. President McKinley is said to have a plan for ending the war under consideration, but it was not made public. Monday, May 24. The fiftieth anniversary of the Catho lic diocese of Albany was celebrated, Archbishop Martinelli presiding. The resignation of the Thou minis try was accepted by the king of Den mark. and a new cabinet was formed. Stockholders in the Watsonville (Cal.) beet sugar factory were forced to sell their shares to Claus Spreckels and the Sugar trust. An English syndicate is seeking to build a railway across Nicaragua in op position to the American Canal compa ny's contract. The business of the Metropolitan Na tional hank of Kansas City has been absorbed by the National Bank of Com merce of that city. William R. Morse, a bookkeeper, was arrested in Brooklyn, charged with for gery by T. B. Basslin of Watertown, N. Y. Officers had been looking for Morse for a year. Tticsdny, May 25. The United Slates supreme court de ckled that the interstate commerce com mission has not the power to fix rail road rates for future control. John Gentles, a prominent dentist of Montreal, and two companions were drowned in the Cedar rapids, in the river Rouge, while on a fishing expedi tion. The president remitted the sentence of dismissal from the army imposed up on Captain Henry Homeyn by the court martial before which he was recently tried*. President McKinley cabled birthday congratulations to Queen Victoria, and by his permission armed men from the , British warship Pallas took part in a celebration at Tampa. Fla. General Porter was received by the French minister of foreign affairs. The members of the United States interna tional monetary commission were also presented to M. Hanotaux. Wednesday, May 20. Charles Hillyard, a Brooklyn lawyer, killed his young son and committed suicide. President McKinley nominated Ed win 11. Conger to be minister to Brazil and Brigadier General John R. Brooke to be major general. Congressman Quigg was elected chair man. of the Republican county com mittee of New York to succeed Mr. Lauterbach by a vote of 173 to 2. Special dispatches from Washington state that President McKinley will seek consular advice as to the best method of distribution before giving relief to Americans in Cuba. The trial of Henry O. Havemeyer. president of the Sugar trust, for eon tempt of the senate In refusing to an swer questions about contributions to campaign funds began in Washington. W. F. Mittman. a dancing master, killed himself in the Chicago Chamber of Commerc . He first shot himself md Mien jumped 13 rtories to the street. A letter in his pocket said his wife had wrongfully accused him. The three Democrats In the New Jer sey senate h"!d up the nomination of Joseph Rice for manager of the Tren ton usyium, alleging that he iH no lon- | for a Democrat. He supported MclCln- | ley last fall on the gold standard. SEE castoria ™L the AVegetablc Preparation for As- SIGNATURE si mila t ing the Food and Reg ufa liirgllie Stomachs andßowelsoF OF Promotes Digestion,Cheerful ncssandßest.Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral. tcs otvt frm? NOT NARCOTIC. IS ON IHE \y l\Ar I Lli\ Pumpkin Set J." silx.Senna * J tt?" OF EVEET J\ppcmunt - > J'l Cartoonott SotZ/T * I cfckfi'lrr • J BOTTLE OF V.aitr/yrtesi Huron ) Apcrfect Remedy for Constipa- RjLgfe Bg B Eft tion. Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, 9HI jfa fis | ||l n H fiS Worms .Convulsions, Feveris- hB || B | w9Ur BMS nessandLoss OF SLEEP. H juigJgßlA Facsimile Signature of g| 888 BM BB 88.81 B 1 NEW YORK. S put Tip ino no-size only. It | EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. H cirallo / Is on VL.: ;..-, 11 i "of ' wrapper. I "... ja H If SSm j All tie s fwf World Loves s a Winner" | )W Our'Ninety-Seven M I Supreme I I Years of v / q Oerience MONARCH CYCLE MFG. CO. *} CHICAGO ITEW YORE LONDON p? ail Salesrooms: * W/ 15a Dearborn St. 87-89 Ashland Ave. U Chicago W- Memorial Day ••I'reH*." (•ot the Decoration Day issue of the Philadelphia Presn. If you do not, you will regret it. In keeping with tho im portance of tho day, the Press will issue j on Sunday, May 80, an edition which j will be. in all respects worthy of the occasion it commemorates. Put beyond j all else, this day's issue is to be dis tinguished by a souvenir which will be not only of great interest to all who may | secure it, by ordering their copies of the j paper in advance, but will prove to be. as well, a souvenir of permauent interest and value. It will do more than furnish pleasure for a day, It will be a thing of j beauty to be preserved for all time. In 1 order to make certain of securing this j Memorial Day gift, it is wise to order , your copy of the paper from your news- i dealer in time. Tle Common Impulse. "Of course," said the Importer, "per fection is beyond the bounds of human j expectation." "To be sure," replied the statesman "It is unreasonable to look for a lur ■T that will be absolutely flawless." "Wholly unreasonable." "And so long as there must be de lects—" "Yes." "I thought that I might as well do what I could to have them benefit me instead of somebody else."—Washing ion Star. A Close i "nil. "1 was born the day after McKinley •MIS horn," suid Mr. Manhattan tfeach :o Pete Amsterdam. "You were? Do you know what you remind me of?" responded Pete. "No, I do not." "Well, you remind me of the next number to the one that wins the big prize in the lottery." Tammany Times. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. Juno Ladies' Home Journal. j The •) IIIKI Ladies' Home Journal pres j cuts an infinite variety of strikingly in* | teresting, timely and practical features. ; It, opens with an article on "What. Vie j torla Has Seen," which graphically re counts the progress of tho world in the I past, sixty years, since the coronation of j tho English sovereign. Tho estahlish ! ment of Methodism in America is told in | an interesting article, by Rev. W. .1, Scott, 1). D. It narrates Wesley's groat work, describes the first sermon in America delivered by Wesley, and his Sunday school which was the lirst in the j world. "1 nclo Sam's Confessional"des j crlhes how the money paid into the j conscience fund of the United States j treasury is received. Lovers of fiction will read with delight Eila lligginson's •Imrt story. "One o" Tliem Still, Stub ; born Kinds." and Alice S. Wolf's ro ! 'iiunco. Her After-Fame." A song, "Wake Up! Cupid." by Willard Spenser, 'author of "The Princes Ronnie," "The ! Little Tycoon," etc., wUI be welcomed ! ! >y every lover of music. Dwight L. Moody's contribution to his series of Hihli! Class articles discusses "Hope" in Ills characteristic, lucid manner. Along the mot e practical lines are slrs. S. T. Rorcr s "Cooking Lessons" on vege tibles and their preparation;' articles on < n dross, needlework, etc. The June Jo urn if is attractive, interesting and li - strwetive front cover to cover. lly the. Curtis Publishing Company, Philadel phia. Jo cents per copy. $1 per year. r.'.;:!tlpllcfltlon of Cerma. Colin, n celebrated bacteriologist, says a '? germ could, under favor able conditio :;s, multiply in three dayt? to 4,722,000.0( 0,000, and moke a maw weighing 7,i o tons. CASTORIA _ For Infants and Children. Ha fae /) , _
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers